Jump to content

COUNTDOWN!!! Nextel iDEN Shutdown


Recommended Posts

 

 

I thought the only native Sprint coverage in the U.P. was in St. Ignace and the Sault?!?!?

 

Can you get some tower pictures?

 

Is this the tower in Marinette across the river in Wisconsin?

 

 

Judging by the Sprint coverage map, it's the tower in Marinette.... just barely in Wisconsin. But they do show the coverage in Menominee.

"Menominee!" "Do, do, do do doo!"

 

http://www.youtube.com/#/watch?v=8N_tupPBtWQ

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

 

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

 

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

 

When are you going to start the ebay auction ?

I'm not sure. You have a suggestion?

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm a little confused. Is the equipment for CDMA 800 already on towers that have been upgraded to 4g? What about the equipment for LTE 800?

In the first six months or so of Network Vision back in 2012, sometimes they would not deploy all the equipment, because of early equipment availability issues, etc. However, since approximately Q3-2012, all sites are fully deployed with 800/1900 LTE/CDMA equipment from the get go.

 

So when you see a site that only has one technology accepted, whether 3G or 4G, it means the other technologies have already been installed also. However, the other technologies cannot be accepted as complete at this time. Often the reason why 800 cannot be accepted is because of interfering Nextel iDEN (which is soon to no longer being a problem). Often why 4G cannot be accepted is backhaul. Often why 3G cannot be accepted is because of clustering.

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

 

  • Like 11
Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the first six months or so of Network Vision back in 2012, sometimes they would not deploy all the equipment, because of early equipment availability issues, etc. However, since approximately Q3-2012, all sites are fully deployed with 800/1900 LTE/CDMA equipment from the get go.

 

So when you see a site that only has one technology accepted, whether 3G or 4G, it means the other technologies have already been installed also. However, the other technologies cannot be accepted as complete at this time. Often the reason why 800 cannot be accepted is because of interfering Nextel iDEN (which is soon to no longer being a problem). Often why 4G cannot be accepted is backhaul. Often why 3G cannot be accepted is because of clustering.

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

 

Good post for the FAQ, assuming its not there already.

 

Also, could be good info for the maps to explain why different towers are not 3g or 4g etc.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

In the first six months or so of Network Vision back in 2012, sometimes they would not deploy all the equipment, because of early equipment availability issues, etc. However, since approximately Q3-2012, all sites are fully deployed with 800/1900 LTE/CDMA equipment from the get go.

 

So when you see a site that only has one technology accepted, whether 3G or 4G, it means the other technologies have already been installed also. However, the other technologies cannot be accepted as complete at this time. Often the reason why 800 cannot be accepted is because of interfering Nextel iDEN (which is soon to no longer being a problem). Often why 4G cannot be accepted is backhaul. Often why 3G cannot be accepted is because of clustering.

 

Robert via Nexus 7 using Tapatalk 4 Beta

Ah ok I see. So the only thing that's left to do after the IDEN shutdown is site acceptance? Then they flip a switch then boom we have CDMA and LTE 800? And this starts happening within weeks of the IDEN shutdown?
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure I am at least hoping a lot of sites go live with CDMA 800 soon after the shut down. LTE 800 I thought was part of the NV 2.0 upgrade to start in a year or so.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm not sure I am at least hoping a lot of sites go live with CDMA 800 soon after the shut down. LTE 800 I thought was part of the NV 2.0 upgrade to start in a year or so.

I would surely think that you will see 800 go active for CDMA voice very soon after June 30 and maybe earlier.

Shentel has activated 800 meg on many many sites about a week ago.   I know they were trying to get the Nextel subs off the old Nextel network. Apparently they made it happen. I have 800 meg almost everywhere and it works very very good. If you have a "full Build" site, I would expect to see it go 800 active.  A ground mounted site will probably not go active until they eventually place the antennas and RRU's on top.

I even have a site that is 800 meg active but does not have active 1900 LTE. I am guessing that there is a backhaul issue at that location. It is located in a nastly location where backhaul might be difficult.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I thought the only native Sprint coverage in the U.P. was in St. Ignace and the Sault?!?!?

 

Can you get some tower pictures?

 

Is this the tower in Marinette across the river in Wisconsin

Yes it is the tower just over the river.  Sorry it took me so long to respond been a busy weekend

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Was just wondering if NV work might slow down when the Nextel decommissioning starts?  I'm sure Sprint wants to get the equipment off the towers as quickly as possible so they can stop paying leases, power costs, backhaul costs, etc.  With crews already busy on the rollouts of all the carriers, do you think they might prioritize the Nextel work a little over NV to get the cost benefits sooner?

 

Just more of a general thought, not sure that anyone has heard anything on way or the other.

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Was just wondering if NV work might slow down when the Nextel decommissioning starts? I'm sure Sprint wants to get the equipment off the towers as quickly as possible so they can stop paying leases, power costs, backhaul costs, etc. With crews already busy on the rollouts of all the carriers, do you think they might prioritize the Nextel work a little over NV to get the cost benefits sooner?

I'm guessing the t1s and power bills are much higher than the tower lease. I wouldn't expect a nv slowdown.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm guessing the t1s and power bills are much higher than the tower lease. I wouldn't expect a nv slowdown.

 

 

Was just wondering if NV work might slow down when the Nextel decommissioning starts?  I'm sure Sprint wants to get the equipment off the towers as quickly as possible so they can stop paying leases, power costs, backhaul costs, etc.  With crews already busy on the rollouts of all the carriers, do you think they might prioritize the Nextel work a little over NV to get the cost benefits sooner?

 

Just more of a general thought, not sure that anyone has heard anything on way or the other.

 

Network Vision wont be slowed down because of the iDen decommissioning as the companies who are removing the equipment are entirely different companies then the ones who are installing the gear. IE. The decommissioning contracts were awarded separately from Network vision. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ah ok I see. So the only thing that's left to do after the IDEN shutdown is site acceptance? Then they flip a switch then boom we have CDMA and LTE 800? And this starts happening within weeks of the IDEN shutdown?

 

Sorry to hijack 2 posts, once iDen is shutdown in the coming weeks after June 30th the 800mhz Spectrum will be freed up and since many sites already have the 800mhz RRU already installed they will be able to remotely control the base stations and enable 800mhz radio's on sites that are already completed. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

Ah ok I see. So the only thing that's left to do after the IDEN shutdown is site acceptance? Then they flip a switch then boom we have CDMA and LTE 800? And this starts happening within weeks of the IDEN shutdown?

 

 

Sorry to hijack 2 posts, once iDen is shutdown in the coming weeks after June 30th the 800mhz Spectrum will be freed up and since many sites already have the 800mhz RRU already installed they will be able to remotely control the base stations and enable 800mhz radio's on sites that are already completed.

..Yes

 

Sent from my EVO using Tapatalk 2

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm going to miss this network, even though I haven't been on it in years. Nextel gave me my first real job in 2004. Thanks for the memories!

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ok...at the risk of getting yelled at for being stupid...

 

Please let me know if I am correctly understanding this...

 

The shut down of the iDEN freeing up the 800 spectrum, will mean that the Sprint voice signal will be on the 800 spectrum, and that will more of the 1900 spectrum for Sprint data...

 

Am I right?

 

Sent from my HTCONE using Tapatalk 2

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

The shut down of the iDEN freeing up the 800 spectrum, will mean that the Sprint voice signal will be on the 800 spectrum, and that will more of the 1900 spectrum for Sprint data...

 

No, in most markets, a single CDMA1X 800 carrier channel -- for both voice and data -- will be just an added lane on the highway.  CDMA1X/EV-DO 1900 will continue at previous or even expanded bandwidth.

 

AJ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 

 

The shut down of the iDEN freeing up the 800 spectrum, will mean that the Sprint voice signal will be on the 800 spectrum, and that will more of the 1900 spectrum for Sprint data...

 

 

No, in most markets, a single CDMA1X 800 carrier channel -- for both voice and data -- will be just an added lane on the highway. CDMA1X/EV-DO 1900 will continue at previous or even expanded bandwidth.

 

AJ

.. Didn't you guys learn this from all the schooling we did with AJ?

 

Sent from my EVO using Tapatalk 2

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

.. Didn't you guys learn this from all the schooling we did with AJ?

 

Yeah, and when are you guys gonna let me graduate?

 

;)

 

AJ

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hey floks, I live on orlando,fl and I work for disney. All the employees on disney use those nextel i365is and some other use the blackberry 8350i. That would be interesting to know what will happen in that area with the iden network.

Edited by makio
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • large.unreadcontent.png.6ef00db54e758d06

  • gallery_1_23_9202.png

  • Posts

    • Your referring to the $25.00 a month Infinite Unlimited plan?  I don't see any other plans on there even cheaper than that on their website.  I was looking at the Motorola 2023 Edge fwiw as well for $10.00 a month. 
    • A heavy n41 overlay as an acquisition condition would be a win for customers, and eventually a win for T-Mobile as that might be enough to preclude VZW/AT&T adding C-Band for FWA due to spreading the market too thinly (which means T-Mobile would just have local WISPs/wireline ISPs as competition). USCC spacing (which is likely for contiguous 700 MHz LTE coverage in rural areas) isn't going to be enough for contiguous n41 anyway, and I doubt they'll densify enough to get there.
    • Boost Infinite with a rainbow SIM (you can get it SIM-only) is the cheapest way, at $25/mo, to my knowledge; the cheaper Boost Mobile plans don't run on Dish native. Check Phonescoop for n70 support on a given phone; the Moto G 5G from last year may be the cheapest unlocked phone with n70 though data speeds aren't as good as something with an X70 or better modem.
    • Continuing the USCC discussion, if T-Mobile does a full equipment swap at all of USCC's sites, which they probably will for vendor consistency, and if they include 2.5 on all of those sites, which they probably will as they definitely have economies of scale on the base stations, that'll represent a massive capacity increase in those areas over what USCC had, and maybe a coverage increase since n71 will get deployed everywhere and B71 will get deployed any time T-Mobile has at least 25x25, and maybe where they have 20x20. Assuming this deal goes through (I'm betting it does), I figure I'll see contiguous coverage in the area of southern IL where I was attempting to roam on USCC the last time I was there, though it might be late next year before that switchover happens.
    • Forgot to post this, but a few weeks ago I got to visit these small cells myself! They're spread around Grant park and the surrounding areas, but unfortunately none of the mmwave cells made it outside of the parks along the lake into the rest of downtown. I did spot some n41 small cells around downtown, but they seemed to be older deployments limited to 100mhz and performed poorly.    
  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...